This is the first issued volume in Michael Nyman’s
chamber music series to be released on his own label. It presents the
Piano Trios, written between 1992 and 2010, of which two - Poczatek
and The Photography of Chance - are making their first appearances
on disc.

Poczatek (2010) is a five-movement trio derived from music for
the film of the same name which Nyman wrote in 2009. This new ‘version’
was written for, and premièred by, the Fidelio Trio in November
2010 by which time they had already recorded it. Nyman’s rhythmic
patterns are at their most immediate in this work, the speeds varying
and the dancing paragraphs now more driving, or now more stately, as
the music develops.

Commissioned by Brolly Arts, Salt Lake City, The Photography of Chance
(2004) is melodically infiltrated and animated by the sound of the Sora
bird, native to the area. This twenty-minute work is noticeably appealing,
and its often abrupt conjunctions are frequently startling. The cello’s
slightly jazzy lines, which sometimes run independent of the violin
and piano, assure the music of sonic interest, so too the hints of American
vernacular, such as the Turkey-in-the-straw barn dance moments that
boil up. One also senses the influence of Nyman’s score for The
Piano in some aspects of the writing.

Yellow Beach was written two years beforeThe Photography of
Chance. It is, in the composer’s words, a ‘transfigured
version’ of Come Unto These Yellow Sands, which the Michael
Nyman Band performed in the film Prospero’s Books.Brief,
at six minutes, it segues from one incident to another very easily and
its transfiguration, for the Ahn Trio, is effective though non-essential
Nyman. More significant is Time Will Pronounce, the earliest
work here, written in 1992. Owing its genesis to the war in Bosnia -
the title derives from a Joseph Brodsky poem - this is the most overtly
expressive work of the four. Its intensity is accompanied by greater
necessity for tonal weight from the string players, and increased use
of vibrato. The driving motoric sections generate considerable excitement
and evoke Nymanesque Boogie, as well as anguish, but the work ends in
contemplative silence, as if all passion has been spent.

Presentation is gatefold with a booklet note written by the composer.
Sound quality is fine throughout, as are the excellent performances.